Figure Legends
Figure 1: Anteroposterior chest radiograph showed volume loss
and decreased bronchovascular shadows in the left lung, and prominent
right pulmonary vascular structures.
Figure 2: a) Contrast-enhanced axial chest computed
tomography (CT) image shows right pulmonary artery stenosis (arrowhead)
and a pulmonary artery sling (arrows), in which the left pulmonary
artery originates from the right pulmonary artery and then forms a
partial ring around the left main bronchus. b) Axial chest CT
image with lung window settings demonstrates a significant compression
and stenosis of the left main bronchus (dashed arrow) due to the
pulmonary artery sling. Moreover, CT showed left lower lobe pneumonia
(*). c) Coronal reformatted chest CT image with minimum
intensity projection demonstrates an abnormal bronchus that originated
from the left main bronchus and extended to the right middle and lower
lobes, indicating a bridging bronchus anomaly (arrows). Note the
stenosis of the left main bronchus due to the pulmonary artery sling
(dashed arrow).
Figure 3: A three-dimensional volume rendering CT image of the
posterior view of the tracheobronchial tree shows an abnormal bronchus
that originated from the left main bronchus and extended to the right
middle and lower lobes, indicating a bridging bronchus anomaly (arrows).
Note the stenosis of the left main bronchus due to the pulmonary artery
sling (dashed arrow).